Ethics
Noggin
Operant Conditioning
Anxiety Disorders
Dissociative Disorders
100

This must be done before the trial/ study to insure the patient has an understanding of what the study is about

Informed Consent

100

responsible for problem solving, emotional traits, reasoning, speaking and voluntary motor activity

Frontal Lobe

100

Trying to weaken a bad behavior

punishment

100
  • Characterized by reliving a traumatizing or upsetting event in unwanted, recurring dreams and memories.

PTSD

100
  • Scattered pattern of thinking

  • Group of severe disorders characterized by disorganized and delusional thinking, disturbed perceptions, and inappropriate emotions and behaviors.

Schizophrenia 

200

Forcing a participant to stay in the study or behave in a way they typically would not

coercion 

200

right and left, sensation, Reading, and body orientation

Parietal 

200

Adding something to the situation

positive

200
  • Characterized by disruptive, irrational fears of objects or situations

Phobia

200

preoccupied with illusions or hallucinations 

paranoid 

300

Lying to the participant about what the study is researching 

Deception 

300

Responsible for understanding language, behavior, memory, and hearing

Located in the center of the brain

Temporal

300

trying to strengthen a good behavior

reinforcement 

300

Characterized by undesired repetitive thoughts and actions.

OCD

300

 loss of their sense of identify and they flee from their home, family, career, and friends.

dissociative fatigue

400

Why did the CIA drug US citizens with acid?

Mind control 

400

Located at the back of the head under parietal lobe

responsible for vision and color perception



Occipital

400

Twelve-year-old Nina developed a habit of slamming the door to her bedroom when she was not happy about something and this behavior bothered her parents.  One day when Nina came home from school she realized her father had removed the door from her bedroom.  After the door was returned (two weeks later) Nina never slammed her door again.  Which operant conditioning consequence did Nina receive?

positive punishment

400

the fear of being alone in a situation or place where escaping would be difficult

Agoraphobia 

400
  • A loss of the personal information items of one’s memory.  For example, one forgetting their identity.


    • This can happen as a result of PTSD

dissociative amnesia

500

A member of the research team acting as a participant in the study is called a.... (the man being shocked in the milgram experiment)

Confederate 

500
  • Located at the bottom of the brain

  • responsible for balance, coordination, and fine muscle control

Cerebellum 

500

Twelve-year-old Nina developed a habit of slamming the door to her bedroom when she was not happy about something and this behavior bothered her parents.  One day when Nina came home from school she realized her father had removed the door from her bedroom.  After the door was returned (two weeks later) Nina never slammed her door again.  Which operant conditioning consequence did Nina receive?

negative punishment

500

The following celebrities have what anxiety disorder?

Mariah Carey,  Carrie Fisher, Demi Lovato, Brian Wilson, Jimi Hendrix, Ernest Hemingway, Ted Turner, Catherine Zeta-Jones, Vivien Leigh, Frank Sinatra, Winston Churchill, Walt Whitman, and Virginia Wolfe

Bipolar

500
  • use to be called multiple personality disorder

dissociative identity disorder

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